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[For Seniors] Liven Things Up with Trick Riddles You Answer!

[For Seniors] Liven Things Up with Trick Riddles You Answer!
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[For Seniors] Liven Things Up with Trick Riddles You Answer!

Riddles are a type of recreation that can help stimulate the brain.

They’re easy to enjoy regardless of age, so many older adults can have fun with them.

Because they’re so simple to pick up, though, you might start to run into the problem of monotony if similar questions keep coming up.

So, let’s add a “trick” element to riddles for seniors!

Trick riddles are questions designed to deliberately lead you to the wrong answer.

In addition to the mental workout of solving them, you can also enjoy the surprise and sense of the unexpected when you learn the correct answer.

Give them a try in an environment where it’s okay to come up with the wrong answer!

[For Seniors] Answer and Have Fun! Tricky Riddles (1–10)

From a box of 20 candies, I took out 5. How many do I have?

From a box of 20 candies, I took out 5. How many do I have?
See the answer

5 pieces

We tend to think, “There are 5 left,” because we took 5 out of 20 candies. However, the question is asking for the number of candies you are holding. You have 5 candies in your hand. It seems the key is to think about the problem calmly.

Please picture a map of Japan. Which prefecture is the northernmost in Japan?

Please picture a map of Japan. Which prefecture is the northernmost in Japan?
See the answer

Aomori Prefecture

When you picture the Japanese archipelago, Hokkaido sits at the northern end, right? You might be tempted to answer that the northernmost is Hokkaido, but the question asks for the northernmost prefecture. The northernmost prefecture is Aomori. By the way, the northernmost point of Honshu is Oma Town, which is famous for its tuna.

Eight children were playing hide-and-seek. Four have been found; how many children are still not found?

Eight children were playing hide-and-seek. Four have been found; how many children are still not found?
See the answer

3 people

It looks like a subtraction problem in arithmetic, but it’s actually a clever trick question. Since there are eight people total playing hide-and-seek, that includes the seeker. The four children who were found plus the child who is “it” makes five. Subtracting five from eight leaves three—that’s the number of children who still haven’t been found.

Onomichi City in Hiroshima Prefecture is famous for its many hills. Which are there more of: uphill slopes or downhill slopes?

Onomichi City in Hiroshima Prefecture is famous for its many hills. Which are there more of: uphill slopes or downhill slopes?
See the answer

same

It feels like a question that tests your knowledge of slopes. However, the number of uphill and downhill sections is the same. “Uphill” and “downhill” are just different terms depending on where you view the same slope from. For example, if you look at a slope from the top, it’s a downhill; if you look at the same slope from the bottom, it’s an uphill.

Jiro caught a cold. As the cold got worse, what did he come down with next?

Jiro caught a cold. As the cold got worse, what did he come down with next?
See the answer

hospital

It has long been said that “a cold is the root of all illness.” If a cold gets worse, it becomes a riddle that makes you think of “a more serious disease.” Once you know the answer is “to go to the hospital,” you can think, “Ah, that makes sense.” The word “kakatta” (to consult/visit a doctor) is the key keyword for answering.

There were a total of 10 radishes buried in the field. If you pull out 6 radishes, how many are left?

There were a total of 10 radishes buried in the field. If you pull out 6 radishes, how many are left?
See the answer

six pieces

Even when you know the answer, it still feels puzzling, doesn’t it? This is a wordplay riddle where the key is the phrase “ato wa nan-bon.” Here, “ato wa” isn’t asking about “how many radishes are left,” but rather about the number of “marks (ato)” left after pulling the radishes. The answer is: there are six marks where radishes were pulled out. It’s a trick question with a slightly mean twist.

Hanako made four bouquets with her friend. If you add the two bouquets that Hanako made by herself, how many bouquets will there be?

Hanako made four bouquets with her friend. If you add the two bouquets that Hanako made by herself, how many bouquets will there be?
See the answer

a bundle

If we add the four bouquets my friends and I made and the two bouquets Hanako made by herself, that makes six bouquets. However, the problem asks for the total when all the bouquets are combined, so six is incorrect. The key part is “combine all the bouquets.” When you combine them all, you get one bouquet!

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